Tectonic Hazards: Effects, Responses and Management
Primary and Secondary Effects
A tectonic event produces two categories of effect, and knowing the difference is essential for structured exam answers.
Primary effects are the direct, immediate consequences of the hazard itself — what happens during or because of the physical event.
Secondary effects are the indirect consequences triggered by the primary effects, unfolding over hours, days, or months afterward.
| Primary effects (direct) | Secondary effects (indirect) |
|---|---|
| Buildings and bridges collapse from ground shaking | Fires break out from ruptured gas mains and downed power lines |
| Roads crack; infrastructure destroyed | Disease spreads through contaminated water supplies |
| Deaths and injuries from falling structures | Landslides triggered on slopes weakened by shaking |
| Submarine earthquakes generate tsunamis | Food and economic insecurity as farms and businesses cannot operate |
| Ground liquefaction (saturated soil behaves like liquid) | Homelessness drives overcrowding, worsening disease transmission |
If asked to "describe the primary effects of an earthquake" and you write "cholera outbreaks followed" — that is a secondary effect and is unlikely to gain credit for a primary-effect point. Check every point: did this happen because of the shaking directly, or because of something else the shaking caused?
Case Study: Haiti Earthquake, 2010 (LIC)
12 January 2010 | Magnitude 7.0 | Epicentre 25 km from Port-au-Prince
Haiti was the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere before the earthquake. The combination of dense informal settlements, unreinforced concrete construction, and an overwhelmed government produced a catastrophic outcome.
Primary effects:
- Estimated 230,000 deaths; 300,000 injured; 1.5 million made homeless
- 250,000 residences and 30,000 commercial buildings collapsed or were severely damaged
- The Presidential Palace, parliament building, Supreme Court, and 60% of government buildings destroyed
- Road networks blocked by rubble, severely hampering rescue access
Secondary effects:
- A cholera epidemic, introduced via a contaminated water source near a UN camp, killed over 10,000 Haitians in the years following the earthquake
- 3 million people needed emergency food, water, and medical aid
- Mass displacement into tent cities with no sanitation infrastructure
- Estimated economic damage of $8–14 billion — equivalent to Haiti's entire annual GDP
- Political instability, looting, and breakdown of law enforcement in the weeks after impact
Immediate response: International search-and-rescue teams arrived within 48 hours. Over 130 countries contributed aid. However, the destruction of Port-au-Prince's port and airport created logistical chaos.
Long-term response: Progress was slow. Billions in international aid pledged; much was mismanaged or delayed. Ten years on, hundreds of thousands of Haitians were still living in inadequate temporary housing.
Case Study: Japan Earthquake and Tsunami, 2011 (HIC)
11 March 2011 | Magnitude 9.0 | Tōhoku coast, northeastern Japan
Japan's earthquake released roughly 1,000 times more energy than Haiti's — yet its outcome tells a fundamentally different story about preparation and wealth.
Primary effects:
- Approximately 18,500 deaths and missing persons — the vast majority killed by the tsunami, not the ground shaking
- A tsunami reaching heights of up to 40 metres in some coastal inlets swept up to 10 km inland along hundreds of kilometres of coastline
- Over 120,000 buildings destroyed; hundreds of thousands more damaged
Secondary effects:
- Fukushima Daiichi nuclear crisis: the tsunami disabled the plant's cooling systems, causing three reactor meltdowns. 160,000 residents were evacuated from a 20 km exclusion zone; some areas remained off-limits years later
- Over ¥16 trillion (~$200 billion) in economic damage
- Global supply chain disruption — Japan manufactures critical components for the automotive and electronics industries
- Japan's nuclear energy programme was effectively suspended under political pressure, causing a major shift in energy policy
Immediate response: Japan's highly trained Self-Defense Forces deployed over 100,000 personnel within 24 hours — the largest domestic military mobilisation since World War II. Emergency supply chains functioned despite the scale of destruction.
Long-term response: Infrastructure in affected coastal communities was largely rebuilt within two to three years. Fukushima decommissioning remains ongoing and is projected to take decades.
Why Effects and Responses Differ: The Development Factor
Placing both earthquakes side by side makes the development factor undeniable:
| Dimension | Haiti (LIC) | Japan (HIC) |
|---|---|---|
| Magnitude | 7.0 | 9.0 (far more powerful — ~1,000× more energy released) |
| Deaths | ~230,000 | ~18,500 (mostly from tsunami) |
| Building codes | Absent or unenforced; unreinforced concrete | Strict seismic codes enforced; base isolation, cross-bracing |
| Early warning | None | 90-second earthquake early warning system; automated train stops |
| Emergency services | Overwhelmed; dependent on international aid | 100,000 troops deployed within 24 hours |
| Economic recovery | Still incomplete after a decade | Infrastructure largely restored within 2–3 years |
Japan's losses were real and devastating — particularly along the tsunami-affected coast where no building code protects against a 15-metre wave. But relative to the energy of its earthquake, Japan's preparation saved tens of thousands of lives. Haiti's poverty made a moderate earthquake catastrophic.
The pattern holds globally: in the period 1990–2020, LICs and LMICs accounted for approximately 90% of disaster-related deaths despite experiencing fewer than 50% of the world's major natural disasters.
Want more lessons like this one?
Generate lessons on anything you study. Free account, no card needed.
Why People Live in Hazardous Areas
If tectonic hazards cause such destruction, why do hundreds of millions of people live within active earthquake and volcanic zones?
Fertile volcanic soils: Volcanic ash weathers into mineral-rich soil that supports highly productive agriculture. The slopes of Mount Etna (Sicily) and Mount Merapi (Indonesia) are among the most intensively farmed land in their countries. The benefit — reliable food production — outweighs the infrequent risk.
Economic reasons: Volcanic regions often have geothermal energy (Iceland provides ~70% of its heating from geothermal sources), mineral resources, and long-established industries that tie communities to hazardous locations.
Tradition and attachment: Communities have lived in the same place for generations. Displacement carries enormous social cost — loss of community networks, livelihoods, cultural identity. Japan's coastal fishing communities rebuilt in the same locations after 2011 despite the tsunami risk.
No viable alternative: In many LICs, the hazardous area is also the only affordable place to live and work. Choosing between a flood-prone informal settlement near employment and no home at all is not a free choice.
Perceived low probability: Major tectonic events are infrequent. People who have never experienced a significant earthquake or eruption in their lifetime systematically underestimate its likelihood. This optimism bias is documented consistently in disaster risk research.
Monitoring, Prediction, Protection and Planning
Four strategies — often abbreviated as the 4 Ps — can reduce risk from tectonic hazards:
Monitoring: Detecting changes in the Earth that may signal imminent activity. Seismometers measure ground movement in real time; GPS sensors detect ground deformation (bulging or subsidence) around volcanoes; gas sensors measure changes in sulfur dioxide emissions, which increase as magma rises. Japan operates one of the world's densest seismometer networks — over 1,000 instruments nationwide.
Prediction: Using monitoring data and historical patterns to forecast when and where an event is likely. Volcanic eruptions are increasingly predictable — rising ground, increasing small tremors, and gas emissions typically precede an eruption by days to weeks. Precise earthquake prediction (exact time and location) remains scientifically impossible. The general location of future earthquakes is known (fault zones), but not when the next major event will occur.
Protection: Building design and engineering to withstand hazard impacts. Earthquake-resistant construction uses: rubber isolation bearings (absorb seismic waves beneath the building), cross-braced steel frames, reinforced concrete shear walls, and flexible joints. Japan's skyscrapers are designed to sway rather than shatter. Tsunami sea walls protect coastal towns — though the 2011 event overtopped walls designed for a maximum 10-metre wave.
Planning: Land use zoning to keep critical infrastructure away from active fault lines; pre-designed evacuation routes with clear signage; regular community drills (Japan holds a national earthquake drill every September on the anniversary of the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake); school earthquake education from primary age.
Common Exam Mistakes
1. Describing secondary effects as primary
Cholera, fire, disease, displacement, and economic collapse are secondary — they result from the earthquake, not directly from the ground shaking. Test each effect: "Did this happen because the ground shook, or because of something the shaking caused?" If it's the latter, it's secondary.
2. Attributing Japan's 2011 deaths primarily to the earthquake
Approximately 90% of deaths in the Tōhoku disaster resulted from drowning in the tsunami, not from building collapse. The earthquake itself was handled remarkably well by Japan's infrastructure. Crediting the earthquake for the deaths without specifying the tsunami mechanism is inaccurate.
3. Stating that "rich countries are not affected by natural hazards"
Japan's 2011 disaster caused $200 billion in damage — among the most expensive natural disasters ever. Rich countries are affected. The difference is in mortality rates and recovery speed, not in whether the hazard has an impact.
4. Confusing monitoring with prediction
Monitoring = observing and recording current conditions (seismometers, GPS, gas sensors). Prediction = using that data to forecast a future event. You can have extensive monitoring without reliable prediction — which is precisely the situation with earthquakes today.
5. Saying "Haiti was worse because the earthquake was bigger"
The Haiti earthquake was magnitude 7.0. Chile's earthquake the same year was magnitude 8.8 and killed 99.8% fewer people. Answers that link death toll to magnitude without discussing human factors demonstrate a fundamental misunderstanding of hazard risk — and are unlikely to exceed Level 1 on a levels-of-response question.
Generate revision on any topic you study
Type any topic you're studying and Aicademy generates a complete lesson, quiz, and flashcard set — personalised to your level.
Lessons on anything
Structured, level-matched lessons on any topic you study
Practice quizzes
Find out what you actually know before the exam does
Flashcard sets
Lock in key concepts with instant revision cards
Ask Aica
Stuck on something? Get a clear explanation, any time
Tectonic Hazards: Plate Tectonics and Processes
Tropical Storms: Formation, Structure and Effects
Related lessons
7 Slides
7 Slides